No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen - Redistricting wars take a miserable turn for Democrats
Episode Date: May 10, 2026The redistricting wars take a miserable turn for Democrats. Brian interviews LA mayoral candidate Nithya Raman, NAACP general counsel Kristen Clarke, and candidates for the Georgia Supreme Co...urt, Miracle Rankin and Jen JordanPre-order The Day After: https://www.harpercollins.com/pages/thedayafterSupport Nithya Raman: https://www.nithyaforthecity.com/Support Miracle Rankin: https://www.miracleforgeorgia.com/Support Jen Jordan: https://www.jen4georgia.com/Written by Brian Tyler CohenProduced by Sam GraberRecorded in Los Angeles, CASee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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The redistricting wars take a miserable turn for Democrats, and I've got three interviews,
L.A.Maioral candidate Nithia Rahman, NDACP General Counsel, Kristen Clark,
and candidates for the Georgia Supreme Court, Miracle Rankin, and Jen Jordan.
I'm Brian Tyler Cohen, and you're listening to No Lie.
Some daunting updates for the Democrats as these redistricting wars that were launched by Trump
continue to devolve.
Alabama is now moving to eliminate their existing 5-2 map and revert back to their previously
struck down 6-1 map, which,
packs all Democratic voters from Montgomery and Birmingham into just one district. This follows Tennessee
successfully eliminating all Democratic districts by cracking Nashville and Memphis. Louisiana goes
from two Democratic seats down to one. South Carolina is now advancing a map that eliminates the
state's only Democratic seat. And of course, that's in addition to the five additional Republican
seats in Texas, four in Florida, two in Ohio, one in North Carolina, and one in Missouri. I presume
this trend will continue with Republicans eventually eliminating almost all, if not all,
Democratic districts in states that they control. So here are a few hard truths. First, Republicans will not
stop. They, to their credit, engage in these long-term projects, whether it's Roe or the Voting Rights Act.
They will fight to eliminate these things for 50 or 60 years if they have to. And they did. And they
were successful, which means that Democrats will not be able to reason with these people. They will not be
able to compromise with them. They will gain nothing by conferring goodwill to the other side.
And the only thing worse than watching Republicans run roughshod over a democracy is thinking that
some misguided sense of compromise will ever change anything. My second point, going tit for tat
against the GOP buys us nothing. You will not find a bigger advocate for the prop 50 ballot measure
than me. I literally raised a million dollars toward it. I'm proud of the fact that it happened.
But in retrospect, adding just five Democratic seats to neutralize five Republican seats in Texas was not a deterrent.
Clearly, to his credit, here's what Mark Elias said a year ago.
Republicans don't care about democracy.
You know, Republicans support Donald Trump because of an authoritarian.
And they will abuse every norm.
They will violate every tradition.
They will seek to weaponize every law, every practice, everything that they can in order to gain power.
for the sake of having power.
And they are not going to be deterred from doing that.
If they, you know, turn a grotesque map into an obscene map in Texas,
and our response is, okay, well, we found, you know, four or five seats of our own.
They will take that as a win, right?
Because they've done what they want.
And then, as you say, they will move on to Missouri.
They'll move on to Florida.
They'll move on to Ohio.
They will move on to Utah.
They will move on to, you know, wherever will be their next place.
And they will not be deterred.
What we need to do is we need to recognize that if we want to stop the slide of democracy,
we as Democrats, we as people in the pro-democracy movement, need to tell them that if they
take five seats, we're going to put 30 seats on the table, right?
Because they need to understand that there will not just be parity if things go against them,
but actually if they guess wrong and this winds up escalating, they could wind up on the severe losing side.
So when people say to me, you know, don't bring a knife to a gunfight, I don't even want to bring a gun to a gun fight.
You know, I want to bring something more than a gun to the gun fight.
I want to bring missiles to the gunfight.
I want to bring hand grenades to the gun fight because I want the underside to understand that not only are we going to fight as hard as them, but we are going to fight smarter than them.
And he's right.
You gain nothing by going tit for tat.
You have to go on offense, which brings me to the third and final point.
We now know the Republican strategy, not a secret.
It's not going to sneak up on us here.
They will gerrymander every Democratic district out of existence.
Their judges will let them do it, even if expressly prohibited by their own state
constitutions.
Florida proved as much.
So our only recourse now, recognizing what they are doing, is to go on full offense.
That means that Democratic officials in New Jersey, New York, Illinois, Colorado, Washington,
Oregon and on and on need to wake the fuck up and start redrawing these maps for full,
full Democratic control. Why? Because going tit for tat deters no one. You need to show Republicans
some deterrent effect for what they're doing. And also, look, if Democrats do go all out,
guess what? They can actually win the redistricting war. California has 52 seats. Republicans
currently hold seven. That is a big hall. New York has 26 seats. Republicans currently hold
seven. That's a big haul. So these governors and state legislators on the left need to realize that this
is no longer about fairness. It is about fighting back so that Democrats are not engineered out of the
House forever. And look, I get that Democrats don't have the stomach for this kind of warfare. Find it.
The time for good government solutions is long gone. Now it's existential. I'm going to read an excerpt
from my new book the day after, which was written expressly because Democrats do not wield power
while Republicans are content to abuse it.
Quote,
how have Republicans managed to skew democracy so much
because they pursue power over principle,
whereas too many Democrats pursue fairness and good government?
Republicans controlled the drawing of 191 districts in 2024
compared to only 75 controlled by the Democrats.
The rest of those House districts
were drawn by commissions, courts, or divided state governments.
In the Democratic strongholds of California and New York,
there are independent redistricting commissions.
In Texas and Florida,
no such thing. In Republican-controlled districts, there is little recourse to correct the maps.
In their largely conservative courts, the judges often refrain from interfering with map
schemes, unlike the mostly liberal courts reviewing maps in Democratic districts.
So I wrote this book expressly because I realized that this issue was creating a massive asymmetry
between the two parties. One party wields power recklessly and aggressively. The other party
just shies away from it. But at a moment where democracy itself is endangered, that kind of
disparity is literally going to relegate Democrats into obscurity forever.
And by the way, if you'd like to support my work and support that message,
please consider pre-ordering this book.
I'm going to put a link in the show notes of this episode.
I'd really appreciate it.
So look, at this point, I hope that everybody listening recognizes that the onus is on us
to apply as much pressure as humanly possible to our blue state officials.
And if they won't do it, like Maryland State Senate President Bill Ferguson,
then we need to support others who will, like Bobby Lippin, who has.
running against him. If they won't do it, like Colorado Governor Jared Polis, we need to support
the gubernatorial candidates in Colorado who will do it. And the same goes for every seat in every
blue state there is. Now is do or die. Our democracy quite literally depends on it.
Next up are my interviews with Nithya Rahman, Kristen Clark, Miracle Rankin, and Jen Jordan.
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I'm joined now by candidate for mayor of Los Angeles,
Nithia Rahman, thanks so much for joining me.
Thank you for having me.
So this is the city that I live in.
I've been covering this race.
I'm curious first and foremost because I think a lot of
the national attention that this race is getting is owed in large part to the fact that Spencer
Pratt has been a very vocal, kind of Trumpian voice in this race. But like Donald Trump in 2016,
there are a lot of people that are saying, you know, there are a lot of things that are wrong
with Los Angeles and nobody seems to be speaking as bluntly about how to fix them as him.
And so what is your response to the attention that he's garnered online with very much the same
style that Trump had 10 years ago? You know, I think that Spencer Pratt is
tapping into a lot of the frustrations that people have in Los Angeles, by the way that things
are going. And his Trumpian qualities is exactly why I think Angelino should be taking this
race seriously, but should also be grappling with the critiques. L.A. right now feels worse
than it did two years ago or three years ago. For a lot of Anglino's, it feels like we are moving
in the wrong direction rather than in the right direction. And that is.
isn't just a consequence of the fact that economically things are harder. It's also a consequence
of the fact that even some of our most basic services in the city, like streetlights and potholes,
are worse than what they were before. There's 30,000 streetlights out across the entire city.
There's more potholes than they were. And our homelessness crisis continues to exist on our streets.
And I think this is the same issue that we're facing nationally, which is if you feel
like the country is moving in the wrong direction. And if you feel like establishment
democratic politics is not feeling that urgency to solve those issues or to prevent them
from happening in the first place, people lose faith in government. And I feel that frustration
around me in Los Angeles every day. And that's, you know, it drives me in my work and it drove me to
run for this seat. But I also think,
it's a very real thing that we should take seriously and we need to grapple with. And we need to
offer it an honest response, a response that's rooted in actually solving these problems.
Otherwise, people will turn to fascism to mini-Trump, which is who I think Spencer Pratt really
represents. So if you're saying that these problems need to be fixed, if you're correctly
diagnosing these problems, if they're so obvious to you and me and everybody else who recognizes
the issues with Los Angeles, clearly the mayor.
the current mayor, Karen Bass, could see these things too.
And so what is the response as to why these things aren't getting done?
You know, I think some of the problems are the direct result of the way in which our local
political machine works and the way in which campaign financing works here and the way in
which political campaigns are funded.
We are in a budget deficit right now, a real kind of fiscal challenge that was driven by
the fact that the police union is one of the major plays.
in our local politics, and the mayor signed an unsustainably large contract with LAPD in
2023 in part to secure their support for her future election, which she has, and that money
is now being spent against me. And that unsustainably large contract has led to real budget deficits,
which have led to service cuts across the entire city, which have made life in the city
harder and worse for ordinary Angelinos. I don't think the choice right now needs to be between
our broken status quo that is motivated by these kind of really political decisions around some of
the most important issues facing Los Angeles and between a MAGA Republican. These do not have to be
our only options. I really feel like we can build a better city here, but we have to reorient
ourselves towards serving the public, towards serving Angelinos, not just serving the political
interests that really maintain the status quo in City Hall.
So there are three issues that I want to focus on, and that's housing, homelessness, and
Hollywood.
And I think that Hollywood and housing are things that I want to discuss reforms with you.
But homelessness is something that we're spending a shit ton of money on right now that I
think largely folks can agree is not getting better, or at least not very.
or at least not visibly getting better.
I'm sure that if you look at the numbers,
you know, there's some, you know,
small incremental percentage of people
who are getting into beds.
But I think in large part,
people in this city recognize
that a lot of money goes toward this
and that there isn't, you know, a solution
that is, you know,
easy to identify taking place.
And so, you know, why hasn't this been able,
why is this issue so difficult to navigate
in Los Angeles,
especially given,
just the influx of money that's put toward it?
A big part of the reason.
So I want to say that in my district,
we've had a really big reduction in tents and encampments.
And I represent District 4.
And we've done a lot of the work in my district to actually reduce visibly and palpably
the number of large encampments, tents that were on the streets.
I've seen a 54% reduction over a three-year period and more over the time that I've been in office.
And so I think you can make a palpable impact on this issue, but it requires real coordination.
In L.A. right now, we've increased our spending on homelessness by 15 times over just a few years.
And we've given a lot of money to our homeless services authority and to homeless service providers.
But in the city, despite my efforts to create oversight and accountability, there's very few staff that are actually looking at how we're spending.
spending that money and ensuring that every single dollar that we're spending is actually getting
to results. Do you know the total number of spending in the past fiscal year that goes toward
homelessness in L.A.? So it's about 700 million from the budget. And do you know how many people
were taken off the streets and put into beds? I don't know that offhand. But there are, yeah,
roughly, is there, is there any indication? Thousands of people go into or to shelter and to housing,
across the entire system every year.
But many of them return to the streets
because they don't have adequate care in the shelters.
They're not connected to mental health services.
And people cycle in and out of shelters all the time.
But the reality is part of the reason
we don't see a lot of progress on our streets
is that we still lack the number of shelter beds
that we need for our total homeless population.
We only have a third of the shelter
that we need for our total homeless population.
And we don't manage our shelters,
very well. And so when people get into them, this is what I was saying, we invest a huge amount of
money in homelessness. But the city of Los Angeles right now does not have an office, an entity,
an department that is tasked with ensuring that every single dollar is working as hard as it could
to get people indoors and to keep people indoors and to make sure that they're moving on to their
next step as quickly as possible. This to me is a huge failure of accountability. I've pushed to
create the very first Bureau of Homelessness Oversight in the city. We finally got that passed
through the city budget process last year. But because of a lack of urgency from City Hall,
including from this mayor, we don't have a single new staff member for this homelessness
oversight body at all, which means we have no information, no one responsible for actually making
sure that the system works. I can do whatever I can at the district level, but at the citywide
level. We have to have the urgency to create a truly accountable system. And that requires the mayor's
efforts. She is the person who has the convening authority and the power to be able to move that forward.
That's part of why I'm running. And I want to go back to what I said earlier, which is if we don't
build trust and faith in the system, if we don't ensure that people's tax dollars are going towards
real results, if this city, which has voted three times in the past few years, to tax itself, to provide
a response to the crisis on our streets with housing and with shelter and with services. If we don't
demonstrate results, people will lose their faith in government. And that scares me. As a progressive,
as someone who really believes in the power of government to do good, we need to deliver on that.
What does success look like? Let's say you're elected mayor and obviously the issue of homelessness
is, you know, the subsequent election will be a referendum on that issue. Let's be honest. It's
it's Los Angeles. It's always a referendum on homelessness. What does success look like for you in
four years? So I released a plan just a few days ago talking about my approach to how I would address
this issue. And what I'm promising is a reduction in tents and encampments across the city by
50% by the Olympics, which is in two years. And by the end of my first term, that we will have
addressed all tents and encampments across the city. And I have a plan, excuse me, I have a plan to get there,
that uses our existing investments and our existing dollars, but uses them much more effectively
and ensures that people are transitioning into lower cost voucher programs and mental health beds
that can effectively get many more people off the streets without asking for more money from the
public.
Another issue I want to switch over to is the entertainment industry.
I have interviewed, every gubernatorial candidate I've interviewed, even when I've spoken to Newsom,
I've been a bug up his ass every time about expanding the TV and film tax credit.
Yep.
I've lived here for 15 years.
I moved here because of the entertainment industry.
I have seen a city bustling with activity when it comes to TV and film production down to what it is right now, which is, you know, even in my own circle of friends, I've had people move to Atlanta, people move to New Jersey, to New Orleans, even to Canada, because that's where the work is.
And so as we look toward, you know, trying to regain what we can from this industry,
what is your plan to bring jobs back to not, you know, to the city that we live in?
You know, I think we have to make a much better case for this tax credit.
And as mayor, I want to be the loudest, most fervent advocate for a tax credit that is designed
to be competitive with the other jurisdictions that are taking jobs away.
And frankly, we should have been advocating for this years ago because the loss in jobs
has been happening for many years now, we need a tax credit that has no cap that is guaranteed
years into the future. It has to be guaranteed because studios want to invest locally.
And in order to invest locally and to make those investments, you have to be able to know that
you can apply for this next year or the year after. So it has to be with no cap. It has to be
guaranteed years into the future. And I think we have to figure out better ways of structuring it
so that above the line costs are addressed so that we can also incentivize things like post-production
to also happen here.
I mean, this is the kind of tax credit that we desperately need.
And, you know, as a representative, as a mayor of the city of Los Angeles,
I would be the loudest advocate for that, both in Sacramento and now in D.C.
where discussions around a tax credit are also happening.
I'm very glad to hear you say a tax credit with no cap,
because that's something that I've been advocating for for years.
And I think that the $750 million is a good first step, but it's only a first step.
And clearly not enough to bring, you know, to bring business back into Los Angeles as we are now at the lowest point that we've been for those who have careers in the entertainment industry in this city.
And I think, oh, and I think for businesses who are trying to figure out for studios that are trying to figure out where to shoot.
Yeah.
Right now it's a lottery system.
Correct. And that's why we saw Netflix invest so much money into,
New Jersey.
New Jersey. You know, and that would have been great for me 20 years ago, and I grew up in
New Jersey, but not so much anymore. But another big part of this is not just the tax credit.
It's also the difficulty to shoot in this city. And I have the luxury, even though I work in
politics, of having all of my friends work in the entertainment industry. This way I don't have to
talk about politics after work. But like, it is difficult to shoot in this city. And the permits are
a nightmare to shoot in this city. And the costs are a nightmare to shoot in this city. And the costs are a
nightmare to shoot in this city. And we have regulated ourselves into obscurity at this point.
And so on a more local level, do you have a plan to make it easier to actually shoot in this
city so that money, time, resources doesn't go toward dealing with bureaucracy that doesn't
exist in other places where they clearly want this business and those same bureaucratic
loop barriers don't exist? 100%. And this city has an approach to film permitting and
and filming in LA that we need to completely change.
The city has taken shooting for granted.
It's taken the industry for granted for a very long time.
And now we need to do much more to ensure that we are actually incentivizing and making
as easy as possible for productions to shoot here.
And I would do everything possible to ensure that we're removing the barriers in City Hall
to those issues.
On day one, I would appoint a film liaison who had film industry experience, who knew what
productions needed. I would staff out a full film office in the mayor's office so that we were
making sure that all issues were addressed so that we could be doing inter-jurisdictional coordinating.
So many places in L.A. like the beaches have both county and city responsibility. It should not be
on productions to liaise between two different jurisdictions. It should be on the city to make sure
that this is happening. Across the city, we have things like neighborhood filming conditions.
where productions have to pay additional fees even to homeowners associations and to local
neighborhood associations, these kinds of things are remnants of an industry that doesn't look the
same anymore. And we need to get rid of all of those kinds of barriers and costs.
There are also additional costs for things like police officers and fire marshals.
Not every production needs the level of bureaucracy and staffing that we required of them.
And I would want to make sure that we were removing all of those.
and for smaller productions, potentially eliminating it entirely.
Great. And just for folks who are watching and listening right now,
I also want to be clear that when we talk about the entertainment industry,
this isn't like to help Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie and George Clooney.
Like, there are hundreds of thousands of jobs that are everything from catering
to PAs and production to post-production and special effects houses
and hotels that rely on people coming into town to show.
this stuff and transportation. I mean, it's all the jobs that the hundreds of thousands,
if not millions of jobs that make up this industry beyond just what you see in front of the
screen. It's no different than what the auto industry was to Michigan or or any other
major industry is to the region that they come from. So, you know, I know that like people will
kind of, you know, turn their nose up at the entertainment industry because it's, it doesn't feel
as, as important. But this city exports culture to not just the rest of the country, but the
world. And I think that, I think that, you know, that that has never been more important,
especially at a moment when reality oftentimes feels so grim to have, to have that world
to escape into and to support the arts in such a big way. And finally, I want to talk about
housing because I'm intimately familiar with this. And I know that it is as close to
impossible to build in Los Angeles as, as it could be. Even as as I have, you know, as I have
I've built my own house.
I know that you can't put a shovel in the ground for more than a year.
I mean, this is, you know, everything I'm saying is no surprise to you.
I'm sure you've heard it every which way.
So what is your stance on reforming all that makes Los Angeles so difficult to build in?
I mean, we absolutely need to transform this city into a city that says yes to new housing,
rather than a city that is really designed around delaying and denying new housing.
We have an extraordinarily intensive housing shortage here.
We have the fewest homes per capita per adult of any city in America.
And we have the highest rent burden population of any major city in America.
Those numbers are directly related to each other.
And it didn't happen by accident.
This city said no to housing for a very long time.
residents stood up and had an active anti-housing movement, and City Hall responded by making
construction as slow as possible, particularly for apartments that are exactly what we need
so much more of. Our average time for approving an apartment here is over a year and a half,
much longer than in other states like Texas and Colorado. And I want to change all of that. I want to
create a bureaucracy that's designed to say yes in a reasonable amount of time. So I want to put in place
a shot clock, a deadline by which the city has to say yes or no to a permit application.
60 days for zoning compliant projects, 120 days for projects that require some zoning changes.
I want to make sure that we are having a single inspector look at a project from day one to finish
so that bureaucracy is not giving you two different responses to what you need to do in order to actually
be allowed to build. I want to make sure the Department of Water and Power, which can add millions of
dollars and costs and add months of delay to a project is forced to come to the table
from the beginning and tell you exactly what it's going to take and when they're going to
turn the lights on. All of these things, these bureaucratic changes can actually transform the
process of construction here and can make it much more possible for the city to build
at the scale that it needs to in order to address our housing shortage.
And I mean, to that point, too, there is national significance here, especially as we
approach the 2030 census where California is expected to shed electoral votes and the states that are
going to pick them up are not historically blue states. I mean, Texas is expected to pick up
electoral votes. And so how does the national environment inform, if at all, how you think about
your responsibility or your duty to make sure that we support our population here in California?
Oh, I think it's incredibly important, especially as we're watching the redistricting battles play
out across the rest of the country, we cannot afford to let this state and this city become
less populous. We can't afford to give up house seats at this moment. I mean, I think it is
absolutely essential for us in terms of our broader democratic project here in the country.
And to me, this work on making sure that this city is welcoming, that we can actually invite
more people to live in it instead of driving, working families out of it, we lost 54,000 people
over the past few years.
And that's a huge population loss here.
And it's going to impact us into the future.
One of the things that has always been something that I've been so proud of as a representative of Los Angeles
is that this city is a place of inclusion and welcoming for the LGBTQ plus community,
for people of color, people who are fleeing oppressive environments at home come to Los Angeles seeking refuge.
And if this place becomes unaffordable, it is no longer that for so many people.
So for me, it is really part of what I love about Los Angeles, part of what we need to keep
alive about Los Angeles.
Our housing crisis is intimately connected to our ability for the city to be a place of welcoming
and inclusion and opportunity.
And I think it's a really important electoral strategy at a time when every vote in the House matters.
Well, I appreciate you taking the time today.
Thanks for addressing all those issues.
With that said, for folks who are looking to help out with your campaign work, and they go.
Nithia for the city.com is our website where you can donate, sign up, learn more.
And I'm on socials at Nithia for the City everywhere you go to consume social media.
Awesome.
Well, I want to remind people who are watching right now, if you live in Los Angeles,
if you have friends or family in L.A.
The election is happening right now.
We are in early voting.
The election, the last day is June 2nd.
So please make sure to make your voice heard, to get your ballots in.
And Nithia, thank you so much for taking the time.
Thank you so much for having me.
I sincerely appreciate it.
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I'm joined now by General Counsel for NWACP, Kristen Clark.
Thanks so much for taking the time.
Thank you for having me.
So we have some news here in light of the fact that not only has the Supreme Court struck down Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, but now Tennessee is the first state to redraw their maps to eliminate the only Black Opportunity District in that state.
The NAACP has sued.
So can you first off give some information as to what the legal basis for this lawsuit is given the fact that it seems, at least from the general public's vantage, that with.
Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act struck down, there is no more justification or requirement,
I should say, for states to even have Black Opportunity Districts.
Yeah. Well, first, today was a dark day in American democracy.
The Senate and House Florida courts that led to eventual dismantling of the only majority
black congressional district in Tennessee was just disastrous. And, you know, this come,
just a few days after the Supreme Court's ruling that really put the death knell in the Voting Rights Act.
At the NAACP, we are committed to using every tool available to fight back and to stand up for voters
and to make sure that every American, every citizen in Tennessee has an equal voice in the
electoral process. And so what we did today is we filed suit in state court. The government
the governor called a special session, an extraordinary session in order to pull the legislature back to
redraw the maps. Under state law, that proclamation has to be very specific and clear.
And the proclamation called lawmakers back to redraw the boundary lines of maps. But they did a lot more.
There is a law that's been on the books that stretch of it.
back five decades that actually makes mid-decade redistricting illegal, unlawful.
And so they had to take action with respect to that law.
They also did something else unusual.
They waived the residency requirement for one year for people who are going to be running
under the districts carved out in this new map.
It's our position that the proclamation should have included these very two significant
and important actions.
And because the governor didn't include those two additional actions, this session was unlawful,
that the map should be discarded and that they should start back from square one.
And starting back from square one, I think should be leaving the status quo in place.
There's no reason that Tennessee needs to do this.
Yeah.
Well, other than to eliminate as quickly as possible, any representation for the state's only black
Opportunity District. Given the fact that this is so, that this is so urgent right now,
you know, we have midterms coming up so quickly. Are you seeking a preliminary injunction?
How fast do you expect this process to move?
We think it will move very fast. And so stay tuned. It's why we did not delay. And we moved
very swiftly to file our lawsuit just hours after the maps were passed.
through the legislature. But we're really tracking very closely what's happening across the south.
You know, Tennessee clearly wanted to be at the, you know, start of the, the title wave here.
But it is a dark moment in American democracy where we see state officials taking bold and unprecedented
action to disenfranchise black American citizens.
And it's not just in Tennessee.
I mean, we're looking at this process playing itself out in Alabama, in Louisiana,
where the Calais decision first originated from in South Carolina,
where the only representative, black representative in that state is Jim Clyburn.
You know, I had spoken about this issue on air on News Nation with Katie Pavlitch,
and she has echoed this right-wing talking point that the Supreme Court decision
effectively desegregated the South because now you don't have.
districts that were drawn expressly for for black Americans or brown Americans. And so what would
your response to that talking point from the right be? Well, it's interesting that we're not
talking about, you know, a different part of the country. We're talking about the South for a reason
because sadly, this is the part of the country that has a very long and egregious and
undeniable history of discrimination when it comes to giving
Black American citizens' access to the franchise. So it is not surprising that this is the part of the
country that is proving to be ground zero as we see this mass disenfranchisement campaign unfold on
the heels of the Supreme Court's ruling. The Voting Rights Act was one of our nation's truly
most important federal civil rights law. And it just helped to push to really,
really nudge our country in the right direction. And that nudge, that movement really proved to be
most important in the South, which is the part of the country, sadly, that had been most
resistant and hostile when it came to opening up the doors of democracy to everyone.
You know, this, I'm sure that the feeling coming out of this moment is that this is kind of
a retrenchment of Jim Crow. Is that, is that, is that what?
what it feels like from your vantage and I guess as a follow-up to that, what do you say to folks
who see things moving so sharply in the wrong direction so that they can, you know,
have some sense of hope as we move forward and not just completely give up in despair?
You know, Senator Oliver in the Tennessee legislature stood up on a table and held up a big
banner that said Jim Crow 2.0.
Yeah.
You know, I think that is precisely where we are, but it's not the frame that I'd like to think about this moment in.
I think about this being an opportunity for Americans to come together and say that this is not the direction.
We need to be moving.
It's a country.
And some of the crowds that we saw at the Capitol today in Tennessee were multiracial and intergenerational.
And I, you know, I truly believe deep down that this is an opportunity for us to dig deep and just say that this is not the America that we want in 2026.
And it's why we're committed to being really bold and aggressive using the courts as a way to fight back and move us back in a different direction.
I'm joined now by candidates for the Georgia State Supreme Court, Miracle Rankin and Jen Jordan.
Thank you so much for both for coming on.
Thank you for having us.
Georgia has been in the news quite a bit lately.
First, because in Fulton County, ballots were seized from the 2020 election.
That effort was led by Tulsi Gabbard.
But more recently, there seems to be a focus from the administration on even poll workers in Georgia,
whose names are being shared with the administration.
So as we look at Georgia in this upcoming election, where that state is often the testing
ground for voter suppression efforts that are going to be exported to the rest of the country,
What do you say to folks who don't have faith that there are going to be free and fair elections because of all of the interference that seems to already be happening?
So I'll jump in first. I think the biggest thing for people to understand in the context of this race is that all election challenges go ultimately to the Georgia Supreme Court.
And so whenever you're talking about interference with an election or any attempts to monkey around with results or whatever, all of that ultimately goes.
up to the Georgia Supreme Court. And that's why it's so incredibly important for anyone who is
concerned about this to make sure that they feel confident that the people that they're voting
for and that they're putting on the court are really going to, you know, make sure that their
rights are protected ultimately. I would agree that the right to vote having access to
poll places that are not being in combat is very important and is a very
staker right to not have it interfered with. And as Jen previously said, we have a unique opportunity
here in Georgia to decide what does our court look like? Who are those justices that will
ultimately serve for the next six years and help determine some of these key moments in Georgia's
history? So it has been an honor to run for the Supreme Court and to give the voters of our state
another opportunity and a different choice for what the court can look like and making sure that we
stand up and uphold the Georgia Constitution and the rights of all Georgians.
So Miracle, the partisan makeup of the court right now is, I believe that there are nine seats
on the state Supreme Court and eight of them are conservatives.
Is that correct?
That is correct.
So this is, you know, this would be the beginning of a process to rebalance out a court that is
overwhelmingly Republican, not dissimilar to what we saw in Wisconsin, for example, where
there was an overwhelmingly conservative court. And it is these election cycles where liberals are
able to chip away at the conservative majority to the point where it actually flips, but it has to
start somewhere and it could start here. And so, you know, we had just spoken about this idea of
election protection, voter protection, but what other issues come before the Georgia Supreme Court?
Why does this matter for folks in Georgia?
So the Georgia Supreme Court matters because the court ultimately decides what it looks like for us in Georgia,
in Georgian forum a living perspective, right? So be it our right to dealing with access to the vote,
health care, criminal matters, there are so many issues that are fundamental,
are what the Constitution looks like and how is it applied across the board to all Georgians.
that ultimately goes up to the Supreme Court. So when we talk about a court that has the power to
ultimately decide what do the laws in our state actually, how do they get applied and how they
do they actually come out in context in our everyday lives, that is the Supreme Court. And so it's
really important that when we're dealing with these major issues of our rights that are very
fundamentally guaranteed to us, that we have a court that is willing to apply our Constitution fairly.
What we've seen at the federal level is that a lot of those rights are being taken away,
those federal protections that we once had, they're not there anymore.
And so now it's coming back to the states for the states to decide what does Georgia look like,
not just for this year, but from five years, 10 years from now.
And so that's very important.
It's a very pivotal moment because it also leaves the opportunity for states to have different
rules in play, different laws that govern.
And it shouldn't be that way, but when we don't have the federal
protection is giving us the baseline, then now we leave it up to the states to make those important
decisions. And so ultimately in Georgia, a lot of that will land at the Supreme Court.
Jen, do you have anything to add? Yeah, I mean, I think Miracle is exactly right. What we see is
this devolution, right, where it's like things that we've relied on for so long in terms of the
federal courts to really protect the individual rights of people in this country and in this state,
you know, we've been told, you know, there's nothing here for you to see anymore, right?
Whether we're talking about when Dobbs came out and after 50 years, now women don't have fundamental right to autonomy and to privacy, right?
And then just last week with the CalA decision in terms of the Voting Rights Act where it was completely gutted.
Now, forever, because Georgia is a former slave state, right, it was governed by the BRA.
So any challenge went to the federal courts.
So in terms of our state courts, we've really never had to grapple with any of those issues
or had any challenges arising under the state constitution, like a First Amendment or political
association challenge.
Now, because we can't go to the federal courts anymore, that's going to open up a whole other
lane in terms of state courts and ultimately to the state Supreme Court level.
So, Jen, I want to discuss the difference then between.
the existing members of the Georgia Supreme Court and both of you in terms of some of these issues
in particular, as there is more onus on state courts, given the fact that, for example, the Voting
Rights Act will no longer apply and these issues won't be litigated in federal court, but rather
in state court. Can you talk about some of the biggest differences between the existing members
of the Georgia Supreme Court, your opponents and both of you?
Yeah, I think the biggest thing is that our state Supreme Court really now is controlled
by folks who are members and leaders of the Federalist Society in this state.
And for those folks listening who may not know what the Federalist Society is,
I can tell you that members of the U.S. Supreme Court that are members of the Federalist Society
and align are Alito, Thomas, Amy Coney-Barrack,
you know, all of the ultra-conservatives are all federalist society folks. And so our court right now
kind of follows, you know, what the U.S. Supreme Court is doing. And that's kind of whatever they do,
it kind of gets dictated down. The problem with that now is, you know, what are they going to do now
that we have rights that need to be adjudicated under the state constitution? And I'll have to tell you
that historically Georgia's state constitution has been interpreted much more expansively
in a more progressive way. I like to quote a former chief justice of the Georgia Supreme Court
who basically said his judicial philosophy was that the federal constitution is kind of the
floor for people's rights. And the Georgia Constitution always gives people in this state more,
more protections, more rights. Right now, the folks on the court,
They don't believe in that. They don't subscribe to that. And we've seen that in terms of a lot of the decisions that have come down. And probably what is more significant is what we know what's heading toward us in the future. Miracle, when you've spoken with Georgia voters, I'm curious what the principal issue that has been brought up to you has been. And especially like in an environment like this where, where, you know, we have seen a Republican Party kind of.
of campaign on one thing and then when it came time for them to govern, deliver on something
entirely different. So has that been a theme in your conversations with voters?
It has been. People are really concerned what our state looks like, what our nation looks
like. And one of the things that I've constantly heard is what you just said. We were sold
one thing and now we have a totally different existence, right? But beyond that when it comes
to the courts themselves, one thing that I've consistently heard, Georgia
voters say is that they don't feel like it's a place where they can get a fair shot.
Yeah.
And because they don't feel like it's a place where they can get a fair shot, I think more people
are tuning in to judicial elections than they probably have before because now they realize
I actually get to pick who's going to sit on our state's highest court or any other court in
our state, right?
So that has been a underlying theme that I've heard.
But I was hearing that before I even made the decision to run as representing individuals
across the state who've been really injured. My clients, when they come to me because they've lost a limb
or they lost a loved one, they always ask me, will I get a fair shake? Will they take me seriously?
And will I be treated the same? And we hear about equal justice under the law, but it has to be a
lived out principle. It can't be something that we're just espousing, but not actually applying. And so
that's why it's so important that we have justices on the court who will actually stand up
and make sure that the rule of laws being applied for everyone,
and that our Constitution is being read in this most broad sense
to ensure that all the protections that were guaranteed are set for.
So those are the things that I've been hearing from the trail
as I've been going around campaigning.
To that end, and I feel like I buried the lead here,
but can both of you give an idea of what your background is
and why you've decided to run this race?
What's most important to you?
What was the impetus to jump in here?
I grew up in South Georgia, you know, raised by a single mother who had a beauty shop.
And it's one of those things where I didn't have lawyers in my family.
But the most important thing was always about, you know, how you helped your neighbor in your community and really trying to lift everybody up.
And it was only because of pro-education policies in this state at the time that I was even able to go to college and then ultimately law school.
And for the last 25 years, you know, my entire career has been dedicated to representing individuals a lot like Miracle who are facing some of the most significant issues they've ever had to deal with, whether it's, you know, the single mother who's facing eviction on Christmas Eve or, you know, trying to run predatory lenders out of the state or folks who can't get their health insurance to actually cover their breast cancer treatments.
I mean, but what it comes down to is always about an individual who has to get a lawyer involved just to get what they're due.
And that's not right, right?
And so something has to fundamentally change.
And that's also in terms of the way the courts are working.
Right now, people aren't getting a fair shot.
People aren't being treated fairly.
You know, if you're powerful and you've got money, man, you've got a lot better shot, you know, in front of the courts as they are in Georgia right now.
So I know that's why I'm running, and I know that's a lot of the reason why Miracle is running, too.
Yeah.
So I am originally from Louisiana.
So the Calais decision really hits a little differently for me because my family lives in Louisiana right now, the vast majority of them.
And so they're having to grapple with what does it mean when elections are getting canceled?
And what does it mean when we may not have the representatives of our choosing in front of us, like for us to select from?
So growing up in the South, I've been.
seen firsthand how sometimes our laws disproportionately affect individuals. And that's one of the
reasons that led me to law school and ultimately spent in the last two decades or so of my
career fighting for individuals and standing up against powerful corporate interests that try to harm
the, some people call it the little person, which has been an interesting term to me,
but harming individuals, right? Because I think we all matter. And when we are harmed, somebody
needs to be there to stand up for you. So that's something that I pride at myself in doing
throughout my career, taking tough cases and getting great results for my clients. My decision to run for
the Supreme Court really came when I looked at my baby's eyes. I have two young kids that are under the
age of 10 and I frequently tell them you can be whatever you want to be. You can do whatever you
want to do. But if you see something, you need to say something. And if you can do something,
then you need to do something about it. And I'm in a position to be able to do the something, right?
I don't agree with many of the decisions that have been coming down from the courts in our states.
And I understand that there are going to be a lot of decisions that Georgians have to have made by our Supreme Court.
And we need to have individuals on that court that we know will be fair, that will not lean towards corporate interests or special interests, but that will lean towards making sure we ensure that the rights of every Georgian are protected under our law and our Constitution.
Because we're leaving a Georgia for somebody else, right?
I have kids following up behind me, and I need to make sure that I'll leave this state better than what I found it.
And so that's one of the main reasons that I'm running because my babies deserve better.
Georgians deserve better.
And we need a court that will protect all of us.
Jen, for folks who are looking to help Your and Miracles campaigns, where can they go?
They can go to Jen for Georgia.com, Justice for Georgia.com, a miracle.
miracle for Georgia.com. So for both of us, the four Georgia's, well, for me, four Georgia's
F-O-R-G-I-A dot com. So miracle for Georgia.orgia.com. Okay. Is that the same thing?
Yeah, yeah. I'm going to, I use the number, actually. So just the four and then Georgia spelled out.
But look, follow us on social media, share. You know, that's part of this is educating folks. Because like, look,
No one has done this successfully since 1922. Since 1922, an incumbent justice on the Supreme Court has not been beaten. So it's one of these things. Folks don't even know you can vote for somebody on the Supreme Court because they think about kind of at the federal level. And so part of this process has been about educating people to say, look, it is about transparency. It is about accountability. And you have the ability to actually choose the people who are going to make some of the biggest decisions in the coming years.
that absolutely not only impact your life, your children's lives, but even your grandchildren down the
line. Am I not add, Brian, that it's happening right now. This is in November. We have one race,
one race only. It's here in May. We're voting currently in Georgia. If you're listening and you're
a Georgia voter, you have until May 15th to early vote. The election day is May 19th. We don't
show back up on your ballots in November. This is our only race and our only time. This
term to change what the Georgia Supreme Court can look like and for you to have that option to do so
as the electorate. Well, I appreciate, I appreciate you both being here for everybody who's watching
and listening right now, we all have a job to do, which is to make sure that everybody knows
that this race is happening. If you can contribute, then please contribute. But otherwise,
there's no excuse for everyone who is watching and listening right now, not to let people know,
whether it's through social media, whether it's through word of mouth, that this race is happening
in Georgia right now. And as I mentioned,
the top. The process for flipping a deeply entrenched conservative Supreme Court begins with
two seats in this case in terms of flipping the political makeup of the court altogether. So
both of you, thank you so much for taking the time to be here. And again, I'm going to put
the links to both of your websites right here on the screen and also in the post description. For those
who are listening on the podcast, I'm going to put it in the show notes. And best luck in the campaign
intro. Thank you. Thanks for having us. Thanks again to Nithia Raman, Kristen Clark, Miracle
Rankin, and Jen Jordan. That's it for this episode. Talk to you on Wednesday. You've been listening
to No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen. Produced by Sam Graber, music by Wellsey, and interviews edited
for YouTube by Nicholas Nicotera. If you want to support the show, please subscribe on your
preferred podcast app and leave a five-star rating in a review. And as always, you can find me
at Brian Tyler Cohen on all of my other channels, or you can go to bryantellercoen.com to learn more.
